Search This Blog

Subscribe to this blog

Follow by Email

Showering under the stars

Since I've received so many emails and comments about my late night showers under the moonlight, I had to post this picture I found from one of my volunteers. I've added the white arrow pointing out the shower stalls. The brick walls formed two side by side stalls about 7 feet tall, with no roof. The building on the far right is the composting latrine, with the main building in the middle background. It wasn't quite dark yet, but this picture was a great shot of what it was like.Seeing it makes me miss those showers - they kind of turned into a significant moment for me in regards to the bigger picture of our time here and with eMi, as being out in nature away from the city and alone beneath the stars reminded me of where God had brought our family and how following God's plan for your life, though oftentimes difficult and illogical, can certainly lead to exciting adventures and stretch you in ways you never thought possible. It also solidified on my heart a desire to be a part of what God is doing in this world.

Get link

Facebook

Twitter

Pinterest

Google+

Email

Other Apps

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

On our trip to Uganda earlier this month, Alisha and I
passed through Dubai for the first time. For those of you who don’t know Dubai
very well, it is the capital city of one of the 7 emirates that make up the
country of the United Arab Emirates. In recent times, it has become one of the
world’s foremost economic powerhouses and centers for international trade due
in large part to its central location near the entrance to the Persian Gulf
from the Arabian Sea (the northern portion of the Indian Ocean). Over the last
few decades, Dubai has been surrounded by (but largely uninvolved in) many of
the world’s most difficult political and military challenges that have been spread
across much of the Middle East.

Seeing this place was an eye-opener. At one level, the extreme
wealth of the city is unmistakable. We had an overnight layover on the way
over, so to help us stay awake and get a jumpstart on our internal clocks
adjusting to Uganda time, we decided to take a short tour of the city e…

Personal Update
(Don't miss the ministry update at the bottom, below all the pictures!)
This has been my heaviest travel year yet since I joined
EMI, with 3 international trips in the first 5 ½ months of 2017. Looking ahead,
I have 2-3 more before the end of the year – possibly a trip somewhere in August,
then Nicaragua in September, and a multi-office stop (likely in Africa) in
November. If you know me well, then you know that the travel is both the
best and worst part about our ministry work with EMI. It’s the best part
because it allows me to be directly involved with our ‘front lines’ work around
the world and because I get to interact with people from any and every culture. But it’s the ‘worst’ part too because I am wired to be a home
body, so leaving home and my family is never something I yearn to do. I know
that to some who love to travel, this may not be a relatable trait. But trust
me, for who I am, it’s a significant challenge – one of the bigger ones I
routinely face. As…

So if you haven’t been tracking very closely, we generally
try to post an update every 2-3 months. Sometimes, given the normal rhythms of
how EMI works with its project cycles and so forth, on top of the bigger
picture things we’re undertaking (like starting new offices, etc.), two months
seems like a tad too close together since I’m acutely aware of the potential
for those of us working in missions to be overly focused on and excited about every
last detail of our work!
Don’t get me wrong – we feel so loved and supported by our
team of prayer and financial supporters who are every bit as much a part of our
work with EMI as we are and we have never been given the ‘vibe’ that we’re
annoying anyone (well done on hiding it if that’s ever been the case!). But
nonetheless, I am always thinking about what to communicate and strive to do
that in as concise a manner as possible!

Having said that, the last three months have been a blur…and
there’s a fair amount to update on. So, I think inste…

We are the Crawfords - Brad, Alisha, Brodie, Jonah & Graysen. We work with Engineering Ministries International's (EMI's) office in Colorado, having previously lived and worked out of EMI's Uganda (Kampala, Uganda) and UK (Colchester, Essex) offices. This blog is a chronicle of our lives working with EMI.